Dyer v. Hardin

323 S.W.2d 119, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2323
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1959
Docket6846
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 323 S.W.2d 119 (Dyer v. Hardin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. Hardin, 323 S.W.2d 119, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2323 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Appellees, Maxine Ellis Hardin, joined by her husband, W. K. Hardin, sued her uncle, appellant herein, Sam Dyer, together with his wife, Lula Dyer, seeking to impress a constructive trust upon and recover an undivided one-half interest in approximately 2,232 acres or 3½ described sections of land in Armstrong County, Texas, and certain described town lots with improvements thereon in Clarendon, Donley County, Texas. Appellees alleged in effect that on May 12, 1947, Maxine Ellis, then a single woman, at the request of her uncle, Sam Dyer, executed a deed in oral trust conveying her one-half undivided interest in the lands to her uncle, Sam Dyer, who owned the other undivided one-half interest therein and who by agreement between them would hold her one-half interest in trust for her for a period of 10 years upon the condition that he could use the said land but would pay off all indebtedness against her part of the land, which amounted to one-half of approximately $15,864, and pay her for the use thereof the sum of $1,000 each year or the total sum of $10,000 for the 10 year period, at the end of which period he, Sam Dyer, agreed to convey her one-half undivided interest in the land back to her; that near the end of the said 10 year period Maxine Ellis Hardin requested Sam Dyer to convey her one-half interest in the said land back to her in compliance with his promise so to do and upon his refusal to do so, she then being married, was joined by her husband in filing this suit. Appellees likewise therein sued appellants for an accounting for the proceeds from all sources from the said lands from the year 1942 to 1946, both inclusive and for an accounting of the revenues received by him from the farm land from 1947 to 1956, both inclusive, alleging that much of the Armstrong County land in question was farm land and further alleging that she had inherited her one-half undivided interest in the said lands here involved from her mother, Elizabeth Dyer Ellis, deceased, who was a sister of Sam Dyer, and from her grandmother, *123 Minnie Dyer, deceased, who was the mother of Sam Dyer, from whom Sam Dyer likewise inherited his undivided one-half interest in the said land; that her mother, Elizabeth Dyer Ellis and Sam Dyer being the only children and heirs of Minnie Dyer, deceased, and she being the only child and heir of her mother, Elizabeth Dyer Ellis, deceased, that her mother, Elizabeth Dyer Ellis, died intestate in April, 1946 and her grandmother, Minnie Dyer, died intestate in November, 1946, and that from 1942 through 1946 Sam Dyer, in whom she, her mother and grandmother had the utmost confidence, had managed and controlled all of the said land, collecting all of the revenues therefrom without having accounted for such during the said period of time.

On October 9, 1957, at a preliminary hearing, the trial court rendered a summary judgment upon appellants’ motion for such together with depositions attached thereto, denying appellees any recovery for one-half interest in the Clarendon, Donley County, Texas, town lots and the improvements thereon as well as denying them any accounting of ajid recovery of one-half interest in the proceeds and revenues from any and all of the said lands from the year 1942 to 1956, both inclusive, to which summary judgment appellees timely excepted, and the trial court thereby likewise severed the remainder of the suit from the foregoing parts mentioned, that is, severed the controversy involving the Armstrong County lands, to be separately tried upon issues pleaded by the parties. The record reveals that such a summary judgment was again rendered by the trial court on April 2, 1958, to which appellees “in open court excepted and objected in a proper and timely manner.” Upon the said remainder of the suit the said parties repleaded, joining issues with each other upon fourth amended pleadings filed involving the constructive trust and deed to the Armstrong County land, went to trial on April 15, 1958, before a jury on the matters there pleaded, including a plea of limitation filed by appellants, and a plea by appellees for judgment for the revenues collected from the said lands by appellants since May 12, 1957.

Upon three special issues submitted to the jury, without objections or exceptions from either party, the jury found in effect that prior to the preparation and execution of the deed in question by Maxine Ellis Hardin conveying the land in question to Sam Dyer, he (Sam Dyer) had agreed with her that he would reconvey to her the said land at the end of a 10 year period; that Maxine Ellis Hardin would not have executed such deed without Sam Dyer having previously made such an agreement with her; and that Maxine Ellis Hardin did not learn during the year 1952 that Sam Dyer would not reconvey to her the one-half interest in the said lands which she had previously conveyed to him, thus by such answer refuting appellants’ plea of limitation. Thereafter both parties filed motions for judgment upon the jury verdict, but on June 19, 1958, the trial court overruled appellants’ motion for judgment and rendered judgment based upon the jury verdict awarding an undivided one-half interest of the Armstrong County lands in question to Maxine Ellis Hardin as her separate property and likewise awarded to her and her husband, as against appellants, the revenues collected by appellants from the said lands since May 12, 1957, in the total sum of $7,961.52 and again making its summary judgment final denying appellees recovery of one-half interest in Clarendon, Donley County, town lots and the improvements thereon, with all costs adjudged against appellants.

Appellants have perfected an appeal from the judgment rendered and have presented 19 lengthy points of error, each of which will have our consideration here but not in the order presented.

It may be well to observe here that after Maxine Ellis’ mother died, her uncle, Sam Dyer, and wife, Lula Dyer, became more attached to Maxine Ellis and seemed to treat her like an own child since they had no children of their own. Maxine Ellis was *124 then 26 years of age and had a college education but seemed to have little business ability when Sam Dyer and wife began buying her nice presents and her Uncle Sam sent her away on several nice visits, one of which was to Washington, D. C. and another to New Orleans. After the death of her grandmother Maxine Ellis had inherited an undivided one-half interest in the lands in question and her Uncle Sam Dyer had inherited the other one-half undivided interest in the land. On or about December 21, 1946, Sam Dyer and his wife Lula Dyer and Maxine Ellis, all of whom lived in Clarendon, Texas, went together to Amarillo, Texas, where Colonel E. A. Simpson, an attorney at law and a good friend for many years to Sam Dyer and wife, drew separate wills for all three of them, which wills were on December 21, 1946, duly executed by them separately but all of the said wills were witnessed by the same witnesses. Maxine Ellis Hardin testified that the wills were drawn at the suggestion of her uncle, Sam Dyer, who determined what to put in them. Sam Dyer and wife, Lula Dyer, named each other as primary beneficiaries in their respective wills with Maxine Ellis named secondarily as a beneficiary of each of them in case she survived the named primary beneficiary.

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Bluebook (online)
323 S.W.2d 119, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-hardin-texapp-1959.